Nasreddin's paradoxical logic shows that real elevation begins with accepting lowliness, revealing how mountains teach humility through reversal.
Nasreddin frequently inverts expectations: the wise man acts foolishly, the rich man becomes poor, the answer lies in the opposite direction. Applied to mountains, this suggests that true ascent requires first descending into self-doubt, confusion, and littleness. We typically imagine climbing as an upward journey of accumulation—gathering strength, confidence, peak experiences. But Nasreddin would ask: what if the mountain teaches by stripping you down? High places are notorious for revealing human smallness: the thin air, the vast horizons, the insignificance of individual effort against geological time. Rather than fighting this feeling, the Hodja's tradition embraces it as the actual teaching. To climb the mountain authentically, you must first accept that you are nobody important. This inverted ascent—where going down inside yourself is the secret to going up on the slopes—aligns ego-dissolution with genuine elevation. Mountains and high places become paradoxical teachers: they humble us in order to truly raise us. Descend first; then climb from actual ground.
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